Theresa May is digging in on her Brexit deal offer to Brussels after the EU publicly doubted the controversial proposals were workable.

Government sources insisted the Prime Minister was “standing over” the Chequers Cabinet compromise on withdrawal plans despite a mauling of the initiative by EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier.

Mr Barnier openly questioned the credibility of the UK’s proposals in his first response to the Government’s white paper on Brexit.

And in comments that will likely alarm arch-Brexiteers in Tory ranks, the vice president of the European Parliament, and MEP for Ireland’s governing Fine Gael party, Mairead McGuinness, made it clear to BBC2’s Newsnight that Mrs May would need to abandon some of her red lines to clinch a deal.

She said of London’s proposals: “It’s a starting point, it’s not an end deal.

“I think the British Prime Minister set out red lines too early on and too deeply.

“We are prepared to show flexibility if the British Prime Minister can show flexibility.”

Defence Minister Tobias Ellwood insisted the white paper was a workable compromise.

He told the BBC: “There is no yes/yes solution here which will balance out the extreme views of the Brexiteers and the extreme views of the Remainers.

“It is therefore essential that we have compromise.

“And this is exactly what the white paper does.

“It means that we have for the Remainers, we have access to goods and services, a deal with Europe as well.

“We have financial markets as well.

“And on the Leave campaign side of things, the bill, the EU bill stops. We leave the customs union, we leave the agricultural policy, we leave the common fisheries policy, and, of course, we are able to strike our own deals.”

The comments came after Mr Barnier expressed concern that Mrs May’s proposal for a “facilitated customs arrangement” opened up the risk of major fraud, additional bureaucracy and damage to EU businesses.

Tory arch-Eurosceptic Jacob Rees-Mogg said Mr Barnier’s “aggressive” comments “show why we are right to be leaving the mafia-like European Union”.